What It’s Like Inside A Vicious DDoS Attack

Anthony Lye, CEO, HotSchedules On Sunday, May 17, cybercriminals launched a vicious distributed denial of service (DDoS) attack against my company, HotSchedules, a cloud-based service supporting more than 2 million workers in restaurants, hospitality, and retail industries. For 45 hours, from Sunday night to Tuesday afternoon, the assailants prevented employees from checking and managing their […]

On Sunday, May 17, cybercriminals launched a vicious distributed denial of service (DDoS) attack against my company, HotSchedules, a cloud-based service supporting more than 2 million workers in restaurants, hospitality, and retail industries. For 45 hours, from Sunday night to Tuesday afternoon, the assailants prevented employees from checking and managing their schedules — and never stated a motive.

However, what began as every CEO’s nightmare ultimately became a source of pride and valuable lessons for me. HotSchedules had fended off many such attacks over the past 16 years without any interruption to service. This one was exceptionally ferocious, and I believe that other companies can benefit from what we learned.

Thanks to Hollywood, we tend to imagine cyberattacks as technical battles, fought in the bunkers of the Internet by good and bad hackers sitting in front of black screens with green code. In reality, cyber-battles are fought by everyone in an organization. If you run a company, an attack will test your culture, teamwork, and collective dedication to its mission. Either your team will find a way to fulfill its commitment to customers – or it will become paralyzed. There is a technical fix to every cyber challenge, but the human response determines whether you win or lose in the eyes of your customers.

The human element

Sunday evening, upon receiving news of the DDoS attack, the entire HotSchedules team rushed to our offices. No one was called or specifically asked to do anything. Throughout the conflict, people took initiative and never asked for permission to act.

The highest priority for any business is to continue serving customers. We still had access to our database, so our engineers pulled rosters and passed them to our customer service team, which had swelled with implementation team members, customer success managers, marketers, HR, and almost everyone in non-technical roles. They downloaded the schedules and emailed copies to each customer. For the next 48 hours, our team worked the phones, email, and social media with almost no sleep. When customers called in, we provided rosters, schedules, shift swaps, and other core services.

The second highest priority is transparency. Once we knew what had happened, we emailed customers immediately. Our policy was to “leave no conversation behind,” an idea we originally learned from BTC Revolutions, a digital and social marketing and strategy agency that trained our team. We posted announcements and updates on our website, Facebook, Twitter, and made direct calls to customers the next morning and answered every post and tweet we saw.

Our team worked without sleeping for two days yet kept up a level of intensity that was unbelievable. The data center floor became a makeshift sleeping area for engineers who refused to leave their post for more than a power nap. Companies either have or don’t have this human element. It comes down to who you hire, how you train people, and the sense of purpose employees find in their work. As CEO, I could not have felt more proud of our team.

Companies either have or don’t have this human element. It comes down to who you hire, how you train people, and the sense of purpose employees find in their work. As CEO, I could not have felt more proud of our team. – Anthony Lye, CEO, HotSchedules

The cyber battle

While all customer-facing team members maintained service and communicated with customers, our IT groups addressed the cyber threat. None of our data was compromised, but we were unprepared for such a vicious attack.

The assailants hit with 10- to 15 gigabytes per second (Gbps) of traffic – 250 times our standard rate. When I called my peers in banking and telecom for advice, they were stunned. This was more than enough traffic to bring down most commercial businesses. It required a whole team of assailants, careful orchestration, and an expensive investment in network resources.

It’s difficult to know if and when the attack is over. Wherever we moved, the DDoS followed. At one point, we attempted to publish our service on another IP address, but the criminals took us down again. We made the difficult decision to publish “black holes” that discard incoming traffic. It’s a way of saying, “You got us – we’re not letting you do any further damage.”

Ultimately, our sleepless security engineers re-engineered the whole service on a subnet protected by Akamai’s cloud security solution, which can withstand over 321 Gbps of traffic. At 2:37 pm CT on Tuesday, May 19, we were up and running again.

The take away

The FBI has not been able to determine who committed this crime and why; there were no ransom demands, claims, or motives declared. Although thousands of servers in multiple countries hit us, we know that 60 percent of the attack originated overseas. I doubt we’ll ever identify the attackers.

Considering that 90 percent of companies suffer DDoS attacks, protection is worth it, no matter how much it may cost. Retreating from the cloud would be as absurd as downgrading from cars to horses in order to avoid crashes. Given the costs of on-premises technology, restaurant software is prohibitively expensive without cloud and mobile computing. We’re not about to abandon an entire industry to fear.

This DDoS attack was the most stressful event in my business career, but it had a few silver linings. We never lost any data, and we maintained some level of service to our customers, who were very supportive. I learned that I have a team of co-workers who will go through 45 hours of hell to do what’s right for our customers. That is more valuable than any piece of technology.